In the never-ending battle between pirates and DRM makers, there are no easy victories. Or at least, that was the case with notorious anti-tamper tech Denuvo until, well, yesterday.

Denuvo anti-tamper was supposed to keep Conan Exiles' cavalcade of burly barbarian men under lock and key, but the dang dongs broke free. Now they're flapping and flopping every which way in the breeze. Turns out, it happened because of a boo-boo on developer Funcom's end.

A subsequent update quickly restored it, but that didn't stop pirates from catching Funcom with their pants down. Now there's a DRM-free version of the game out there that people can play on private servers. Obviously, though, it won't receive any updates, so it will forever be stuck in a state of very early access.

"There is unfortunately not much we can do about those who choose to download and play unauthorised copies," Funcom said, "but we hope they make the jump to the official version so they can stay up to date with the latest patches and improvements. Being an Early Access title, there will be a lot of updates going forward!"

In this case, Denuvo wasn't cracked, so much as it fell off for a second. More broadly, though, time has not been kind to the software once regarded as the final boss of the morally grey game that is DRM-cracking. Resident Evil 7got cracked in a week, following cracks of games like Doom, Inside, Deus Ex: Mankind Divided, Rise of the Tomb Raider, and Mirror's Edge: Catalyst in recent months.

The developers of games like Inside and Doom have also taken to patching Denuvo out of their games, though Denuvo told me it had nothing to do with cracks. Rather, Denuvo apparently "accomplished its purpose by keeping the game safe from piracy during the initial sales window" and was no longer needed.

It remains to be seen what'll happen with Conan Exiles down the line. All of this does, however, raise a question: If Denuvo won't keep the dicks safe, who will?

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Comments

steelpanther Guest

Feb 4, 2017, 6:21pm

Gee, look at all this extra publicity Conan Exiles has gained after "accidentally" leaving the DRM off an early access version.

"Rather, Denuvo apparently "accomplished its purpose by keeping the game safe from piracy during the initial sales window" and was no longer needed.."

And yet they keep yammering on about how unobtrusive Denuvo is to the end user... if that were truly the case why would there be any need to remove it even if the game was cracked. They could have just left it on without needing to patch it out for 'goodwill' purposes..